The Lycée Lamartine is a French institute of secondary education in the 9th arrondissement of Paris.
Some parts of the current building date from a renovation done in 1740 by Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne; the panelling in one of the ancient rooms is designated a National Heritage.
[1] The national department of education acquired the building in 1891 and turned it into a lycée for girls.
In 1914, a baccalauréat in science was first awarded; one of the students receiving it, Jeanne Lévy, became the first woman professor at the medical school of the University of Paris, in 1934.
[2] From June to August 1940 the school provided for the many refugees fleeing the German advance.